5 top tips to make your garden centre mobile friendly

February 27 2017

Company: Garden Connect

Edwin Meijer, founder of Garden Connect, gives you 5 top tips to help your garden centre survive in the mobile world.

Last week Edwin Meijer, founder of Garden Connect, found a video on YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aag1P4OwA3s), made in 1999, in which the interviewer is asking random people on the streets if they wanted to have a mobile phone. "I don't see the point of it", "Imagine people would call you while you're on the bike" and "I have a wired one at home, so why would I need a mobile one?" were the answers. A lot has changed since then, hasn't it?

Since more people are using tablets and smartphones rather than desktop computers it's important to assure your garden centre is mobile friendly. Here are my 5 top tips to make sure mobile consumers have a top notch experience!

1. Make sure your website is responsive or adaptive

I think you do know what responsive is by now. It means your website layout changes so it fits well on the device visitors use. It has been around for a few years now and this should be on top of your requirement list while renewing your website. Google punishes you hard if your website is not working well on mobile so be sure to get this sorted.

However, the next step is to make your website adaptive. Adaptive means you're showing different information to mobile users. While on the go, mobile visitors probably wants to know your location and opening hours (of today). They are less bothered about slideshows and huge photos. By making your website adaptive you can show relevant information to users every moment of the day.

2. Advertise mobile only

Back in November, we were wondering if we could generate traffic to garden centres by advertising on smartphones only. We set up a dynamic banner which included directions to our customer. The ads were shown on mobile phones of people in a 10 miles radius around the centre and only between 8 am and 2 pm since most people won't decide to go to a garden centre at 5.30 pm. Every time people tapped on the banner on their smartphone a few photos were shown and directions to the garden centre.

The result? Within 4 weeks 20,000 impressions, 400 people checked the directions and the costs were less than £120 so that's about £0.30 per customer. Now that's effective advertising, isn't it?

3. Use image blocks

Since the pointer of the mouse is way smaller than most fingers, it's important to keep this in mind while designing your website. We've been using bigger image blocks over the last few years which makes it a lot easier to navigate websites on tablets and smartphones. Have a look at Alban Hill's website for example: big, bright boxes which are linking to the relevant content pages. It makes the website looks nice & fresh and it helps mobile visitors to navigate on any device trough your website.

4. Speed up your website

Have you ever tried to open a website and it didn't load fast enough? Chances are you went back to Google to go to another website. That's what happens if your website too slow. Speeding up your website is important to serve your website as soon as possible to visitors. Of course, this helps desktop visitors as well. Google is also pushing your website higher in the search results if you're able to speed it up.

But how do you that? Well, have a look at the Google Pagespeed check and discuss the results with your web designer. We've been able to push websites to a score of 95% and over by tweaking the technique. Visitors won't notice this apart from the fact the website is a lot quicker, but you don't have to remove info from your site in most cases.

5. Keep testing

Visit your own website via your smartphone and check if it's working well. However, do use other devices as well especially Android devices. Since Apple's iOS is updated more or less automatically most users are having the same version of it. Android comes in 100's of different versions so it's always harder to make websites work well on mobile. Test it on your Samsung but also on a cheap Chinese device you can buy at Tesco for £50. Also, after testing it initially keep testing your website every time new updates are released to avoid any issues.

So these were Edwin's 5 tips to be sure your garden centre is mobile friendly once the 2017 season kicks off. In case you have any issues, questions or if you want to know what you should do to improve your own website just him a line.

Contact us

Follow us on...

Newsletter

Sign up to our popular News and Product emails

Newsletter sign up...

Date:

Wed 19th Dec 2018

This form allows you to sign up for Gardenforum newsletters without paying to become a Gardenforum member. It will not give you access to members' premium content. If you want to know more about becoming a member, click here....